JoeB131
Diamond Member
About a Blow Job.You can cry BLOWJOB all day, but it comes back to lying under oath.
And it's even doubtful that he actually "Lied". A lot of guys don't consider a blow job to be sex.
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About a Blow Job.You can cry BLOWJOB all day, but it comes back to lying under oath.
About a Blow Job.
And it's even doubtful that he actually "Lied". A lot of guys don't consider a blow job to be sex.
We have the strongest economy in the world. The stock market is at record levels. Unemployment is at 4.1%.We have to face the enemy, whether they are abroad or at home. They've done enough damage to America already. This is more proof that on election day there really is only one choice for America.
---Trump suggests using the military to address the enemy from within---
![]()
Trump suggests using the military to address ‘the enemy from within’
After referring to his American opponents as "scum," the Republican candidate suggested possibly using the military to respond to "the enemy from within."www.msnbc.com
Progs are communists. It is you who are the traitors. You have usurped the constitution over a period of many decades and fooled the people with their 5-minute attention spans. Got the citizens to get hooked on the goodies even when they did not ask for it. Now many survive on the social programs and are constantly fed the propaganda from "the architects of fear" elites of your Party. You're the real campaign slogan evil with the arrow on many of them. You cannot stop. And this nation is in decline in real ways. Even with all of the wealth we see. Look what that useless legislation caused under Joe and Kamala in inflation.Wow this coming from a Trump supporter. Trump who tried to overturn an election and now says he wants to use the military to take down his opponents and perceived enemies. Of course based on this thread you all agree with Trump’s use of the military domestically. So, save us your bullshit about respect for the constitution. Trump and Trumpers have no respect for the constitution or democracy. It is all about your shoving your agenda down the throats of all that disagree with you.
Yuppers.Oh my word, how do you get into your head that Harris and Biden did the assassination attempts?
It's so easy to manipulate people like you.
"LAWLESS"
You can't quantify that allegation, but you spout it out loud every day.
It's like your Two-minutes HATE, and Trump is your Emmanuel Goldstein
I agree with President Trump.
Enemies foreign and domestic.....they must be stopped.![]()
Trump Brownshirts?We have the strongest economy in the world. The stock market is at record levels. Unemployment is at 4.1%.
What "damages are you talking about?
You don't care Biden/Harris policies have worked, you just want to unleash Trump Brownshirts.
Note the fact that your article is an opinion......not based on facts.Below is an article touching on it, back in 2020, before that election, and this was all before his huge amount of pardons for his criminal friends, and his fabrication of the election being stolen, without any tangible evidence supporting such.... And before we found out he sicced the IRS on to Comey and McCabe, and before his invite to wild at the Eclipse rally, and his incendiary speech on January 6th leading to the attack on the Capitol and peaceful transfer of power...
Add his Trump Organization criminal lawless and convicted acts of which his CFO took the wrap and Served time in jail twice for separate company crimes and trials brought....and his own felonious convictions, and all the legal suits he lost for fudging the books....
His comments on suspending the constitution is LAWLESS.
Using the military for criminal acts of Americans inside the USA is LAWLESS
Using the govt to punish his political foes is LAWLESS. Retribution against foes is LAWLESS.
Going after the press with his power to get rid of them, is LAWLESS.
Like I said, this editorial is warnings before the 2020 election run, let alone the crap of lawlessness he has done since leaving office like stealing classified info, revealing some to people without clearance, his 7 phone calls to Putin likely to undermine the sitting US President's and US Policy,
And before him selling his $100,000 watches to foreign entities trying to buy influence...along with all his other Snake oil goods...and products like his social media site...he is slime at the bottom of the barrel....and just plain crooked, born and bread! It's hard to imagine anyone paying attention could think otherwise...?
The old man of chaos is not worthy of the office, ever again imo... It is a slap in the face to our Nation! AMEN!
----------_--------
Under a lawless Trump, our system of checks and balances is being destroyed
Opinion by the Editorial Board
September 18, 2020
President Trump promised in 2016 that he would protect the Constitution’s “Article I, Article II, Article XII.” (There is no Article XII.) Instead, he has shown how fragile the constitutional order can be when a president does not respect the rule of law. He has not grown into the office; instead, he has learned how to more effectively abuse its powers. The damage of a second term might be irreparable.
A president’s core responsibility is to use the awesome power of his office fairly and with neutrality. Mr. Trump has shown that he has a different understanding: The law is a weapon with which to reward loyalists, punish enemies and frighten everyone else to fall in line.
His distortion of the criminal justice system began within months of his inauguration. When FBI Director James B. Comey tried to explain the proper relationship between the president and the FBI, Mr. Trump demanded loyalty and asked the FBI director to go easy on his former national security adviser Michael Flynn. Mr. Comey declined to promise the former or do the latter, and the president fired him.
The tumult that Mr. Comey’s dismissal elicited might have taught a lesson to a more sensible person: There is substance and expectation behind the presidential oath’s pledge to faithfully execute the laws. Mr. Trump did not learn that lesson. His pick for attorney general, Jeff Sessions, properly recused himself from the federal investigation into Russia’s attack on the 2016 U.S. presidential election — and any coordination with the Trump campaign — leading to the appointment of special counsel Robert S. Mueller III. So Mr. Trump viciously attacked Mr. Sessions, and then fired him, too.
In part because the president’s staff more effectively restrained him back then, the special counsel was allowed to complete his investigation relatively unhindered. But Mr. Trump had no patience for standard Justice Department procedure — recusal when conflicts of interests may exist, special care to avoid even the appearance of impropriety. He reportedly complained that he needed a “Roy Cohn” at the Justice Department — that is, an aggressive protector of his personal interests. So, after firing Mr. Sessions, he hired an attorney general with no apparent concern about the appearance or reality of impropriety, William P. Barr.
Whether out of ideological fervor or fear of Mr. Trump’s wrath, Mr. Barr has aided the president’s friends, hurt his enemies and vociferously attacked anyone who has found these actions untoward. Mr. Barr sicced handpicked prosecutors on the Russia probe, despite independent investigations concluding it was warranted. Then Mr. Barr intervened to lessen the charging recommendation for Trump friend and convicted felon Roger Stone. Mr. Barr also ordered charges against Mr. Flynn, the admitted felon whom Mr. Trump had asked Mr. Comey to help, to be dropped. Yet another Justice Department official, FBI General Counsel Dana Boente, was fired after he opposed cooperating with the plot to clear Mr. Flynn.
Mr. Trump waited until after Senate Republicans voted to dismiss articles of impeachment in February to do more of his own dirty work. His White House already had issued illegal orders to prevent current or former executive branch officers from turning over documents or giving testimony to Congress, betting correctly that lawmakers would not be able to litigate the issue in time for the information they sought to matter. Free of the threat of removal, he committed revenge firings of impeachment witnesses who had only done their jobs and followed the law, including patriots such as Army Lt. Col. Alexander S. Vindman — and, for good measure, Mr. Vindman’s brother, who had nothing to do with impeachment.
Mr. Trump fired intelligence community inspector general Michael Atkinson for forwarding to Congress a whistleblower complaint that had implicated the president in his scheme to use public funds to extract political help from a foreign government. The message was clear: The lawful performance of one’s duties is secondary to protecting the president.
Mr. Trump commuted Mr. Stone’s sentence so that his friend would not have to serve one day, mocking the notion of equal justice before the law. He fired the inspector general tapped to monitor the administration’s coronavirus response programs, for reasons that are unclear, beyond his aversion to authentic oversight. The White House has inquisitors dedicated to rooting out federal staff who are insufficiently loyal to Mr. Trump, and they appear to be planning a broader purge after the November election.
Because the courts move slowly, the president discovered that he can sustain even the most egregious stonewalling and violations for years. The remaining checks would be Congress, but Republicans have almost uniformly chosen subservience to Mr. Trump over fealty to the Constitution, and the executive branch, but Mr. Trump has sought to fire or cow anyone who would stand in the way of his lawlessness.
Last month brought two bright warning signs that the president feels ever-less inhibited. The Government Accountability Office found that Chad Wolf’s appointment as acting director of the Department of Homeland Security is illegal, yet Mr. Wolf is still there, overseeing a department that assisted in Mr. Trump’s alarming overreaction to protesters in Portland, Ore. Mr. Trump then used the White House for his Republican National Convention acceptance speech, which almost certainly resulted in violations of a law that prohibits federal resources from being used for political purposes. The New York Times reported that Mr. Trump “relished the fact that no one could do anything to stop him.”
Americans have long been taught that the U.S. political system has effective checks and balances. But in the past years, a frightening truth has emerged. Much of that balance has depended on the good character of the president, and there are surprisingly few ways to check a malign president from abusing the enormous powers of his office. Mr. Trump is committed to using those powers for his own personal ends, and he has slowly but surely chipped away at any limitations. How many would remain after four more years?
The Democrsts are communists?Trump Brownshirts?
You mean Democrat/Communists with their ANTIFA and BLM rioters?
You mean all of the Democrat's Hamas supporters beating up and harassing students all over college campuses and trashing every monument in Washington?
You've got some nerve, a**hole.
TL;DRBelow is an article touching on it, back in 2020, before that election, and this was all before his huge amount of pardons for his criminal friends, and his fabrication of the election being stolen, without any tangible evidence supporting such.... And before we found out he sicced the IRS on to Comey and McCabe, and before his invite to wild at the Eclipse rally, and his incendiary speech on January 6th leading to the attack on the Capitol and peaceful transfer of power...
Add his Trump Organization criminal lawless and convicted acts of which his CFO took the wrap and Served time in jail twice for separate company crimes and trials brought....and his own felonious convictions, and all the legal suits he lost for fudging the books....
His comments on suspending the constitution is LAWLESS.
Using the military for criminal acts of Americans inside the USA is LAWLESS
Using the govt to punish his political foes is LAWLESS. Retribution against foes is LAWLESS.
Going after the press with his power to get rid of them, is LAWLESS.
Like I said, this editorial is warnings before the 2020 election run, let alone the crap of lawlessness he has done since leaving office like stealing classified info, revealing some to people without clearance, his 7 phone calls to Putin likely to undermine the sitting US President's and US Policy,
And before him selling his $100,000 watches to foreign entities trying to buy influence...along with all his other Snake oil goods...and products like his social media site...he is slime at the bottom of the barrel....and just plain crooked, born and bread! It's hard to imagine anyone paying attention could think otherwise...?
The old man of chaos is not worthy of the office, ever again imo... It is a slap in the face to our Nation! AMEN!
----------_--------
Under a lawless Trump, our system of checks and balances is being destroyed
Opinion by the Editorial Board
September 18, 2020
President Trump promised in 2016 that he would protect the Constitution’s “Article I, Article II, Article XII.” (There is no Article XII.) Instead, he has shown how fragile the constitutional order can be when a president does not respect the rule of law. He has not grown into the office; instead, he has learned how to more effectively abuse its powers. The damage of a second term might be irreparable.
A president’s core responsibility is to use the awesome power of his office fairly and with neutrality. Mr. Trump has shown that he has a different understanding: The law is a weapon with which to reward loyalists, punish enemies and frighten everyone else to fall in line.
His distortion of the criminal justice system began within months of his inauguration. When FBI Director James B. Comey tried to explain the proper relationship between the president and the FBI, Mr. Trump demanded loyalty and asked the FBI director to go easy on his former national security adviser Michael Flynn. Mr. Comey declined to promise the former or do the latter, and the president fired him.
The tumult that Mr. Comey’s dismissal elicited might have taught a lesson to a more sensible person: There is substance and expectation behind the presidential oath’s pledge to faithfully execute the laws. Mr. Trump did not learn that lesson. His pick for attorney general, Jeff Sessions, properly recused himself from the federal investigation into Russia’s attack on the 2016 U.S. presidential election — and any coordination with the Trump campaign — leading to the appointment of special counsel Robert S. Mueller III. So Mr. Trump viciously attacked Mr. Sessions, and then fired him, too.
In part because the president’s staff more effectively restrained him back then, the special counsel was allowed to complete his investigation relatively unhindered. But Mr. Trump had no patience for standard Justice Department procedure — recusal when conflicts of interests may exist, special care to avoid even the appearance of impropriety. He reportedly complained that he needed a “Roy Cohn” at the Justice Department — that is, an aggressive protector of his personal interests. So, after firing Mr. Sessions, he hired an attorney general with no apparent concern about the appearance or reality of impropriety, William P. Barr.
Whether out of ideological fervor or fear of Mr. Trump’s wrath, Mr. Barr has aided the president’s friends, hurt his enemies and vociferously attacked anyone who has found these actions untoward. Mr. Barr sicced handpicked prosecutors on the Russia probe, despite independent investigations concluding it was warranted. Then Mr. Barr intervened to lessen the charging recommendation for Trump friend and convicted felon Roger Stone. Mr. Barr also ordered charges against Mr. Flynn, the admitted felon whom Mr. Trump had asked Mr. Comey to help, to be dropped. Yet another Justice Department official, FBI General Counsel Dana Boente, was fired after he opposed cooperating with the plot to clear Mr. Flynn.
Mr. Trump waited until after Senate Republicans voted to dismiss articles of impeachment in February to do more of his own dirty work. His White House already had issued illegal orders to prevent current or former executive branch officers from turning over documents or giving testimony to Congress, betting correctly that lawmakers would not be able to litigate the issue in time for the information they sought to matter. Free of the threat of removal, he committed revenge firings of impeachment witnesses who had only done their jobs and followed the law, including patriots such as Army Lt. Col. Alexander S. Vindman — and, for good measure, Mr. Vindman’s brother, who had nothing to do with impeachment.
Mr. Trump fired intelligence community inspector general Michael Atkinson for forwarding to Congress a whistleblower complaint that had implicated the president in his scheme to use public funds to extract political help from a foreign government. The message was clear: The lawful performance of one’s duties is secondary to protecting the president.
Mr. Trump commuted Mr. Stone’s sentence so that his friend would not have to serve one day, mocking the notion of equal justice before the law. He fired the inspector general tapped to monitor the administration’s coronavirus response programs, for reasons that are unclear, beyond his aversion to authentic oversight. The White House has inquisitors dedicated to rooting out federal staff who are insufficiently loyal to Mr. Trump, and they appear to be planning a broader purge after the November election.
Because the courts move slowly, the president discovered that he can sustain even the most egregious stonewalling and violations for years. The remaining checks would be Congress, but Republicans have almost uniformly chosen subservience to Mr. Trump over fealty to the Constitution, and the executive branch, but Mr. Trump has sought to fire or cow anyone who would stand in the way of his lawlessness.
Last month brought two bright warning signs that the president feels ever-less inhibited. The Government Accountability Office found that Chad Wolf’s appointment as acting director of the Department of Homeland Security is illegal, yet Mr. Wolf is still there, overseeing a department that assisted in Mr. Trump’s alarming overreaction to protesters in Portland, Ore. Mr. Trump then used the White House for his Republican National Convention acceptance speech, which almost certainly resulted in violations of a law that prohibits federal resources from being used for political purposes. The New York Times reported that Mr. Trump “relished the fact that no one could do anything to stop him.”
Americans have long been taught that the U.S. political system has effective checks and balances. But in the past years, a frightening truth has emerged. Much of that balance has depended on the good character of the president, and there are surprisingly few ways to check a malign president from abusing the enormous powers of his office. Mr. Trump is committed to using those powers for his own personal ends, and he has slowly but surely chipped away at any limitations. How many would remain after four more years?
We are being invaded by illegals. Voluntarily as allowed by this administration. The fix is to use the military to deport them.What would make you think, it had outlived its purpose?
So you were that deep into your echo chamber even way back then.
SO you want to shoot Milley for reasons, Hillary Clinton, Joe Biden, and Obama?Yes, Joe Biden who thinks he is above the law should have his day in court. Just like Obammy, who allowed 10s of thousands of Mexican nationals to be murdered, and Hitlery for her destruction of government property and allowing 4 US citizens to be murdered in Benghazi. Are they above the law?
So you think that the stockmarket is the only indicator of the economy?The Democrsts are communists?
Is that why the economy is so strong and the stock market is at record levels?
Yeah, Trump Brownshirts! You don't see any Democrats talking about retribution and revenge. You don't see Democrats trying to silence the opposition like Trump is threatening. It wasn't liberal Brownshirts rather attacked the capital on Jan 6th.
Don't talk to me about Brownshirts, mother-fucker! If the shoe fits...
So the House should be shot as well for not funding more border PoPo and changing the law to end refugees?In case you missed it, we're being invaded by foreigners JLW
~S~
You do understand that Bush and Clinton are good buddies and that they and the Obama's are all part of the same click that has chosen to exclude Trump?Actually, back in 1998, I was one of you wingnuts screaming to impeach him.
And then Dubya got in, and I found myself in 2008 with a busted 401K, an underwater mortgage, and a 20% reduction in salary, and I had to ask myself, "Was lying about a blow job really that bad?"
We have to face the enemy, whether they are abroad or at home. They've done enough damage to America already. This is more proof that on election day there really is only one choice for America.
---Trump suggests using the military to address the enemy from within---
![]()
Trump suggests using the military to address ‘the enemy from within’
After referring to his American opponents as "scum," the Republican candidate suggested possibly using the military to respond to "the enemy from within."www.msnbc.com
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
Toro, are you one of those watermelons?